Cold case breakthrough solves teen killing after suspect lived free for decades: 'Better be afraid'
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Authorities in Michigan have finally identified the individual responsible for the murder of 16-year-old Sheri Jo Elliott, closing a cold case that has lingered unsolved for over forty years. This breakthrough was achieved through the use of cutting-edge DNA technology.

The Michigan State Police have revealed that Roni Collins, a 75-year-old man from Grand Blanc, is the person behind Elliott’s tragic death.

On November 16, 1983, Elliott left her home in Flint with the intention of catching a bus, but she vanished without a trace.

Her family reported her missing later that day when she failed to return from school, sparking concern and a frantic search.

Sheri Jo Elliott standing and smiling in a portrait photo

Just four days after her disappearance, Elliott’s body was discovered; she had been sexually assaulted and shot multiple times, according to authorities. The Michigan State Police have provided this information.

In a desperate bid to find Elliott, law enforcement and her family engaged in an intense search effort that lasted for several agonizing days.

“It was terrible. But we went and passed missing signs to everybody you know in the neighborhood and in town and stores would put the missing in the windows,” Elliott’s aunt, Judy Sika, told FOX 66. 

Four days after her disappearance, Elliott’s body was discovered in a ditch in nearby Saginaw County. 

An autopsy revealed she had been sexually assaulted and shot multiple times, according to authorities.

Flint, Michigan

Michigan authorities identified Roni Collins, 75, of Grand Blanc, as responsible for the 1983 murder of 16-year-old Sheri Jo Elliott in Flint, Mich. (iStock)

“You just don’t know what a terrible thing it is in your mind when they tell you they found her body,” Sika told FOX 66. “That was awful.”

However, a break in the case came after the MSP reopened the investigation in 2023 alongside the Western Michigan University Cold Case Program to take a fresh look at the evidence.

A view of Western Michigan University campus with investigative activity.

The Michigan State Police reopened the investigation in 2023 with the Western Michigan University Cold Case Program to review evidence in a cold case. (iStock)

“The students assisted in reorganizing and digitizing decades of investigative material, providing critical support to the renewed investigation,” MSP said in a statement. 

The newly reexamined evidence led police to Collins, but not before he died by suicide in January of this year before authorities could obtain a voluntary DNA sample.

Using DNA collected from Collins’ autopsy, investigators “analyzed and conclusively matched evidence recovered from Elliott in 1983, identifying him as the individual responsible for the crime,” MSP said. 

The case is only the latest to use forensic genetic genealogy to lead investigators to the individual responsible for a long-unsolved murder.

“They worked up logical family members, and that can be a thousand people that you have to vet and verify who could probably be related to this person,” Tom Myers, a retired FBI forensic agent, told Fox News Digital. 

“Then you start to develop who’s the likely person,” Myers added. “It’ll usually come down to three or five people like that. Or sometimes, maybe it’s one person who stands out and then when you crosscut that with somebody who’s been a bad boy their entire life then that’s a good chance that that’s who your person is.”

According to Myers, the reality of testing cold case evidence also comes with the possibility that samples may have been damaged or degraded over time. However, the implementation of genetic genealogy has made it easier for investigators to do more, with less. 

“They now can get DNA from a single hair strand, versus a strand of hair with a follicle,” Myers said. “In the 1980s to 1990s, it was a nickel-sized stain down to a dime. Now, it’s three to five skin cells – you can’t even see it. That’s the DNA.”

In light of yet another cold case being solved by genetic genealogy testing, Myers insists the new technology will likely act as a deterrent for aspiring criminals who may rethink their crimes due to the increased possibility of being caught. 

“Investigative genealogy is more comprehensive and, of course, a bigger thing,” Myers told Fox News Digital. “But if [investigators are] on top of their game, you better be afraid, because they’ll get it.”

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